blockquoteemDomestic and foreign terrorist organizations, foreign
intelligence actors, and criminal enterprises are increasingly
using encryption technology to secure their communications and to
exercise command and control over operations and people without
fear of surveillance. emblockquotecaption id alignalignleft
width210 captionPerpetrators of cybercrime and hacking are
constantly improving their capabilities. Photo DoJimg
srchttpcdn2b.examiner.comsitesdefaultfilesstyleslargehash36dfcrime20electronic0.jpg
altPerpetrators of cybercrime and hacking are constantly improving
their capabilities. Photo DoJ width210 height170 captionThis week,
a new threat emerged in the world of cybersecurity hacktivists have
openly launched retaliatory attacks on businesses, organizations
and even governments, shutting down their websites for hours or
days, in protest over actions taken against Wikileaks founder
Julian Assange.We are witnessing a cyber war, the likes of which
have not yet been seen, said Randall Nichols, professor and
director of the cybersecurity programs at Utica College. But the
reality is that this is the battlefield of the present and the
future.The WikiLeaks posting of stolen classified information has
highlighted the tension between the intelligence communitysstrategy
of share to win and the necessity to enforce need to
know.Commanders in the field understand the advantage that comes
from sharing intelligence and information and they do not want to
give up that capability, according to Jim Garamone, an American
Forces Press Service staffer.Since the Wikileaks incidents,the
Pentagon has put in place methods to minimize such thefts of
classified materials. It is now much more difficult for a
determined actor to get access to and move information outside of
authorized channels, Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said in a
written statement following publication of news articles on the
documents Sunday.The theft of the materials traces to the lack of
sharing of information and intelligence prior to and after the
September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. The commission studying the
environment at the time found that agencies werent sharing enough
information with each other.divThe cyber threat confronting the
United States is rapidly increasing as the number of actors with
the tools and abilities to use computers against the United States
or its interests is rising. The countrys vulnerability is
escalating as the US economy and critical infrastructures become
increasingly reliant on interdependent computer networks and the
World Wide Web. Large scale computer attacks on US critical
infrastructure and economy would have potentially devastating
results.divdivCyber threats fall into two distinct categories
threats affecting national security that emerged with Internet
technology, such as cyber terrorism, foreignbased computer
intrusions and cyber theft of sensitive data and traditional
criminal activity facilitated by computers and the Internet, such
as theft of intellectual property, online sexual exploitation of
children, and Internet fraud.divdivIn both categories, cyber
attacks, intrusions, illicit file sharing, and illegal use of cyber
tools are the basic instruments used by perpetrators. Domestic and
foreign terrorist organizations, foreign intelligence actors, and
criminal enterprises are increasingly using encryption technology
to secure their communications and to exercise command and control
over operations and people without fear of surveillance. The
Federal Bureau of Investigation must be able to identify and
penetrate the command and control elements of these organizations
and actors.Recognizing the international aspects and national
economic implications of cyber threats, the FBI created a Cyber
Division at the headquarters level to manage and direct this
developing program. The rapid evolution of computer technology,
coupled with the creative techniques used by foreign intelligence
actors, terrorists, and criminals, requires investigators and
computer security professionals to have highly specialized
computerbased skills.divThe FBI Cyber Program uses a centralized,
coordinated strategy to support crucial counterterrorism,
counterintelligence, and criminal investigations whenever
aggressive technical investigative assistance is required. The
Cyber Program also targets major criminal violators with a cyber
nexus.The FBI must increase its capability to identify and
neutralize enterprises and individuals who illegally access
computer systems, spread malicious code, or support terrorist or
statesponsored computer operations. The Bureau must proactively
investigate counterterrorism, counterintelligence, and criminal
investigative cyber related threats having the highest probability
of threatening national security. To do so requires the FBI to
constantly upgrade its skills and technology to meet the evolving
threat.
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